Emperor Zhi of Han

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!align=center style="background:#ccf; border-bottom:2px solid" colspan=2|Han Zhidi () |- |align=right style="border-top:1px solid"|Family name:||style="border-top:1px solid"|Liu (劉; liú) |- |align=right style="border-top:1px solid"|Given name:||style="border-top:1px solid"|Zuan (纘, zǔan) |- |align=center style="border-top:1px solid"|Posthumous name:
||style="border-top:1px solid"|Xiaozhi (孝質, xiào zhì)
literary meaning: "filial and upright" |- |align=center style="border-top:1px solid"|Posthumous name:
||style="border-top:1px solid"|Zhí (質, zhì)
"upright" |- |}

Emperor Zhi of Han (; 138 – 26 July 146) was an emperor of the Chinese Han dynasty. He was a great-great-grandson of Emperor Zhang. His reign was dominated by Liang Ji, the brother of Empress Dowager Liang, who eventually poisoned the young emperor. He was the 10th emperor of the Eastern Han dynasty.

Emperor Zhi ascended the throne when he was seven when his third cousin, two-year-old Emperor Chong died, and although he was still a child, Emperor Zhi was remarkably intelligent and he knew and was offended by the immense power Liang Ji had over the government—leading to him once commenting that Liang Ji was "an arrogant general." This act of defiance angered Liang Ji, who proceeded to poison the emperor. Emperor Zhi was only eight when he died. Provided by Wikipedia
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